The Top 15 Most-Wished-For Toys This Holiday Season

By Beth Deitchman

The holidays are upon us, and the upcoming season of gift giving means one thing for Disney fans everywhere: a trip to the Disney store. It’s our one stop shop for all things Disney merchandise perfect for friends and family of all ages.

For the first time ever, Disney store and shopDisney.com have created a Holiday Toy Book that establishes Disney as the toy destination this holiday season. From Belle to Buzz, Hulk to Han, fancy tea sets to action figure playsets, there’s truly something for every Disney, Pixar, Star Wars, and Marvel fan.

The products themselves are sure to make kids and kids-at-heart giddy with excitement, but the magic doesn’t stop there. The Holiday Toy Book also includes festive character stickers to mark favorites, plus an opportunity to look for 42 hidden Mickeys placed carefully throughout the book. (Have you found them all?)

For those who aren’t quite sure what to get the Disney fans on their holiday shopping list, Disney store and shopDisney experts have compiled a list of the most wished-for toys this holiday season. Take a look at the Top 15 Holiday Toys below, and let the gifting begin!

Cinderella Castle Playset

1. Cinderella Castle Playset
With four levels of imagination, lights and sounds, it’s a Cinderella dream come true from Walt Disney World!

Buzz Lightyear Talking Action Figure

2. Buzz Lightyear Talking Action Figure
Buzz does plenty of talking and is in full protection mode with light-up details and karate chop action!

Mack Carrier with Six Die-Cast Cars Set

3. Mack Carrier with Six Die-Cast Cars Set
Mack features lights and sounds, plus space for an additional two vehicles.

Disney Parks Holiday Train Set

4. Disney Parks Holiday Train Set
All aboard! Towards the North Pole we go in our festive remote-control toy train gift set, including animated character surprises, plus more than 20 feet of track!

Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Playset

5. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Playset
Mickey is joined by his Clubhouse friends in this colorful set that features interactive light and sound effects.

Disney Animators’ Collection Doll Gift Set

6. Disney Animators’ Collection Doll Gift Set
Discover 13 classic characters together in one gloriously gift-boxed mini doll collection.

The Incredible Remote Control Vehicle

7. The Incredible Remote Control Vehicle
This detailed remote-controlled replica of The Incredibiles features working headlights and a light-up hood.

Millennium Falcon—Star Wars Toybox

8. Millennium Falcon—Star Wars Toybox
Part of the Star Wars Toybox collection, the Millennium Falcon Playset includes sound effects and light up features to guide you all the way through the dangerous Kessel Run.

Marvel Universe Mega Figure Set

9. Marvel Universe Mega Figure Set
Join forces with 20 of Marvel’s most iconic characters, complete with detailed sculpting and metallic detailing.

Spider-Man Talking Action Figure

10. Spider-Man Talking Action Figure
This talking action figure has plenty of fighting words to battle his enemies. And, if that doesn’t work, he can use his two web slingers!

Minnie Mouse Farmer’s Market

11. Minnie Mouse Farmer’s Market
This cart is full of fun produce and products, and play money makes every imaginary shopping trip a delight.

Incredibles 2 Deluxe Figure Set

12. Incredibles 2 Deluxe Figure Set
The 10-piece set includes the five members of the Parr family alongside other familiar faces.

Minnie Mouse Brunch Cooking Set

13. Minnie Mouse Brunch Cooking Set
Minnie is serving up a fine feast (and everyone’s invited) with her 30-piece brunch play set.

Disney Princess Doll Gift Set

14. Disney Princess Doll Gift Set
Featuring 11 of Disney’s most beloved heroines (plus Pua and Hei Hei!), this gift set celebrates the princesses that have captured our hearts.

Belle Tea Cart

15. Belle Tea Cart
Your little princes and princesses will always be prepared for an enchanted tea party with this delightful Beauty and the Beast Singing Tea Cart.

The Sweetest Stats About the Grand Floridian Hotel & Spa Gingerbread House

By Karina Schink

For 20 years, the magical pastry elves at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa have whisked, baked, and decorated to create the magical gingerbread house that warms guests’ hearts and tempts their taste buds. Sweet smells of ginger and sugar fill the lobby of the hotel every holiday season, as this larger-than-life house is constructed. But, while it’s always a sight to behold (and quite a whiff to sniff), there’s more to all that sugar than meets the eye.

Constructing Christmas
The gingerbread house stands 14 feet tall, using more than 60 sheets of plywood in its foundation, which is the first part of the house to be built. With 1,000 feet of trim, this molasses mansion stretches 100 square feet.

Grand Floridian gingerbread house

Pounds of Sugar, Spice, and Everything Nice
Creating something of this merry magnitude doesn’t come without pounds of all that sugary sweet stuff. It takes 1,050 pounds of honey, 700 pounds of chocolate (Anna and Elsa would be reeling), 600 pounds of confectioner’s sugar, and 35 pounds of spices to create the structure. That’s a bit more than your average gingerbread house!

Grand Floridian gingerbread house

Whisked Away
While it takes more than 400 hours to bake and 160 to decorate, it can’t be done without all of the essential baking ingredients. Eight hundred pounds of flour mixed with 140 pints of egg whites are the bread and butter of this holiday creation. And while all of this is used to create the delicious edifice, you can bring some holiday goodness with you when you leave the hotel: The house doubles as a sweet shop, where gingerbread cookies, shingles, ornaments, and cookie bags are available to take home.

Disney•Pixar’s Next Adventure and Casting for The Mandalorian—Plus More in News Briefs

By Courtney Potter

The voice cast for Disney•Pixar’s Onward is revealed, and we find out who’ll be playing The Mandalorian … Read more, along with other news from around Disney, in this week’s news briefs!

Get Ready to Adventure Onward with Disney•Pixar in 2020

The folks over at Disney•Pixar never sit still for long… now that Toy Story 4 is just over the 2019 horizon, they’re already readying their next sure-to-be-amazing film: Onward, set for release in 2020!

And just this week, Pixar Animation Studios revealed four members of Onward’s voice cast: Chris Pratt (Guardians of the Galaxy), Tom Holland (Spiderman: Homecoming), Julia Louis-Dreyfus (Veep), and Octavia Spencer (The Shape of Water). Set in a suburban fantasy world, the film introduces us to two teenage elf brothers who embark on an extraordinary quest to discover if there is still a little magic left out there…

Onward is directed by Dan Scanlon and produced by Kori Rae, the team behind 2013’s Monsters University. “At Pixar we try to create stories that come from some kind of personal truth,” Scanlon recently said. “This film was inspired by my own relationship with my brother.”

Look for Onward in a theater near you on March 6, 2020.

Save the Date!
Be sure to mark these upcoming Disney events on your calendar:

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
December 15, 2018
D23’s Grand Gingerbread Workshop
January 25, 2018
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Dave Smith
August 23-25, 2019
D23 Expo 2019
Parks
January 25-February 17, 2019
Lunar New Year at Disney California Adventure
March 1-April 23, 2019
Disney California Adventure Food & Wine Festival
March 6-June 3, 2019
Epcot International Flower & Garden Festival
Summer 2019
Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge Opening at Disneyland Resort
Fall 2019
Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge Opening at and Walt Disney World Resort

Studios
December 19, 2018
Mary Poppins Returns opens in U.S. theaters
March 8, 2019
Marvel Studios’ Captain Marvel opens in U.S. theaters
March 29, 2019
Dumbo opens in U.S. theaters
April 19, 2019
Penguins opens in U.S. theaters
May 24, 2019
Aladdin opens in U.S. theaters
June 21, 2019
Toy Story 4 opens in U.S. theaters
July 19, 2019
The Lion King opens in U.S. theaters
August 9, 2019
Artemis Fowl opens in U.S. theaters
Television
December 25, 2018
Disney Parks Magical Christmas Day Parade airs on ABC (10 a.m.–12 p.m. EST, 9–11 a.m. CST/MST/PST, airtimes vary, check local listings)
December 31, 2018
Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest 2019 airs on ABC (8 p.m. ET)

Breaking News: New Character on The Mandalorian Revealed!

The first-ever live action Star Wars series, The Mandalorian, is currently in production—and we just learned which actor will be inhabiting the title role. Get all the scoop on executive producer and writer Jon Favreau’s highly anticipated project (which will feature episodes helmed by the likes of actress Bryce Dallas Howard and Thor: Ragnorak director Taiki Waititi) right here.

Phineas and Ferb and Milo Murphy’s Law Get Crossover’d

Listen up, Milo Murphy’s Law super-fans! The Disney Channel fave is returning to the airwaves for a second season on Saturday, January 5, at 7 a.m. PST/EST—debuting on both Disney Channel and Disney XD (and the next day on DisneyNOW). But that’s not all… the brand-new, one-hour episode is a crossover with Phineas and Ferb! Both series are from the hilariously weird minds of producers Dan Povenmire and Jeff “Swampy” Marsh—who will both reprise their Phineas and Ferb roles (as Dr. Doofenshmirtz and Major Monogram) in addition to voicing time travelers from the future, Vinnie Dakota and Balthazar Cavendish, in Milo Murphy’s Law.

To celebrate such an auspicious 60 minutes of brand-new television (the episode is entitled “The Phineas and Ferb Effect”), a super-funny video podcast was just released—featuring Dr. Doofenshmirtz interviewing his very first celebrity guest: the legendary satirist Al Yankovic… who also happens to be the voice of Milo himself.

Check out the clip, above. And make sure to tune in for the big crossover—it’ll be the best way to kick off the new year in the entire Tri-State area!

news briefs 12/12

We Cannot Wait to Explore This Tropical Hideaway…

Just imagine: You’re sitting on the bank of a lush river, deep in the jungle, sipping on a luxurious libation and indulging in a few delicious dishes. Sounds like a dream vacation, right? Well it’s closer than you think—in fact, you’ll soon be able to do all of the above right in the middle of Adventureland at Disneyland park. See some colorful photos and read up on what’s to come from The Tropical Hideaway, an all-new marketplace set to open next door to Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Roomhere at D23.com.

news briefs 12/12

Earth’s Mightiest Heroes are Assembling—and Soon, You Can Join Them

There are a host of new attractions and experiences coming soon to Disney Parks across the globe, and we just learned a little bit more about what to expect. Check out the latest on how the good folks at Walt Disney Imagineering plan to create this amazing new global Avengers Initiative right here.

See the Grand Floridian Gingerbread House Spring to Life

Can you believe that Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa, at Walt Disney World Resort, has been delighting guests with its incredible life-sized Gingerbread House for 20 years? Two full decades of sweet-smelling holiday fun! If you’ve ever wanted to see how the house was built from the ground—well, lobby floor—up, take a gander at this cool time-lapse video from our friends at the Disney Parks Blog, above.

It takes the talented pastry chefs at the Grand Floridian a whopping 400 hours (plus!) to bake the 10,000 gingerbread pieces this behemoth baked good needs for its display. And it’s so big, it actually doubles as a sweet shop, selling all manner of freshly baked items from the Grand Floridian kitchens to guests young and young-at-heart.

A word of warning, however: Watching the above video may make you hungry! Have some festive snacks nearby just in case…

news briefs 12/12

A Distinguished Honor for a Distinctive Disney Film

In the decades since its original 1950 release, Disney’s Cinderella has become an enduring classic—and now, it’s joining other iconic Walt Disney Animation Studios films (including Steamboat Willie, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, and Fantasia) in the prestigious National Film Registry. Find out what makes this honor so special here at D23.com.

ICYMI: Kim Possible Premiering on Disney Channel in February

Come February 15, you’ll finally be able to see Kim Possible and Ron Stoppable in glorious live-action… The all-new Disney Channel Original Movie, based on the fan-fave animated series, will debut in just a few weeks’ time; catch the film’s awesome trailer right here.

Send Some Holiday Cheer This Season with D23 E-Cards

By D23 Team

With a little bit of pixie dust (and some cheerful elves), we’ve created some special cards just for you to send to someone especially wonderful in your life.

Each e-card is themed to Mickey’s Christmas Carol in honor of its 35th anniversary this year. So, check your list (and do it again) and make sure everyone on it gets a little something special to display atop their fireplace this year.

This campaign has ended. Check out D23.com for more Disney fun!

The Official Walt Disney Studio Tours Expand in 2019!

By the D23 Team

studio tours 2019 post

Just in time for D23’s 10th anniversary, the fan-favorite Official Walt Disney Studios Tours return in 2019 with a wide variety of experiences and most importantly… more tours! The D23 Gold Member-exclusive tours of the historic Studio lot return on four weekends in 2019, and our April tour date will be exclusive to Gold Family Members, sold as a “Family 4-Pack.”

studio tours 2019 post

studio tours 2019 post

As recently announced at D23’s Destination D, the Official Walt Disney Studios Tours will be offered monthly starting in March! For the first time, these weekday tours will be available to Gold, Gold Family, and General Members. Just like the tours that take place on the select weekends in 2019, Guests are able to take a look inside the Walt Disney Archives and see Walt Disney’s office suite during the tour, which offers fans a unique perspective on historic moments from Disney films, television shows, and theme parks.

studio tours 2019 post

studio tours 2019 post

In addition, D23 Gold and Gold Family Members won’t want to miss the ultimate Disney Studio opportunity: D23’s Behind-the-Scenes Experience: A Day on the Studio Lot! This event will take place in Spring and Fall 2019 and features one-of-a-kind experiences including a visit to the Ink and Paint Department and lunch in a private dining room at The Rotunda—the executive dining location inside Team Disney Building. The first one will be this March—just in time for the 10- year anniversary!

studio tours 2019 post

Keep an eye on D23.com for more information regarding The Official Walt Disney Studios Tours in 2019.

Pixar Announces Upcoming Feature Onward

By Beth Deitchman

As 2018 winds to a close, we’re looking Onward—to 2020, when an original new feature from Pixar is slated to open in theaters. Today, Pixar Animation Studios revealed four members of the film’s voice cast, which includes Chris Pratt (Guardians of the Galaxy), Tom Holland (Spiderman: Homecoming), Julia Louis-Dreyfus (Veep), and Octavia Spencer (The Shape of Water).

Tom Holland and Chris Pratt

Onward is directed by Dan Scanlon and produced by Kori Rae, the team behind Monsters University. The film is set in a suburban fantasy world and introduces two teenage elf brothers who embark on an extraordinary quest to discover if there is still a little magic left out there. “At Pixar we try to create stories that come from some kind of personal truth,” said Scanlon. “This film was inspired by my own relationship with my brother.”

The filmmakers assembled a dream voice cast—theirs and ours—to bring Onward’s key characters to life. Of Pratt, Rae said,  “Chris brings equal parts huge heart and fantastic humor to his character.” She also enthused about Spencer, “Octavia can do it all. We’re especially excited about the depth as well as humor that she brings to her character.”

Scanlon had this to say about Tom Holland: “Tom has an infectious charm and sincerity that makes you root for him in every character he plays.” He added, “There is no one funnier than Julia, but she also brings a warmth and loving side to her character.”

Onward is set to open in a theater near you on March 6, 2020.

Did You Know? 11 Pixie-Dusted Facts About Tinker Bell

By Jim Fanning

“All the characters in Peter Pan are in some way touched with magic,” Walt Disney once observed, and this was particularly true of the 1953 classic’s breakout star. He added, “The little fairy Tinker Bell glows like a firefly and leaves a trail of pixie dust behind her as she flits about with the speed of a hummingbird.” Walt well knew that the tiny pixie with the outsized personality would enchant audiences, and for 65 years, this sweet and saucy sprite has done exactly that. In her book-length celebration of the shimmering little fairy, Tinker Bell: An Evolution, author Mindy Johnson stated, “The lasting impact of this pint-sized pixie has proven remarkable—she has captivated the world. Filled with earthly humors and human frailties, she is the sheer embodiment of magic and fantasy… through Walt Disney’s persistent vision, J. M. Barrie’s darling Tinker Bell has become the most recognized and best loved fairy of all time.” To celebrate nearly seven decades of Tinker Bell enchantment, here are 11 sparkling sprinklings of pixie dust sure to have you thinking nothing but happy thoughts about everyone’s favorite fairy.

Tinker Bell

1. A Pixie Priority
Even though Tinker Bell made her debut when Peter Pan premiered on February 5, 1953, the twinkling little star was in development since 1939, when Walt obtained the screen rights to Barrie’s 1904 stage play. Personality was everything to the master storyteller, so in “tinkering” with the character for the screen his priority was giving the heretofore non-personalized pixie a specific form and design. Over years of Peter Pan development, the search for the ultimate Tinker Bell visualization resulted in more preproduction art than any other Disney character up until that time, with endless experimentation in hair colors and styles, costumes and body types. Much story work was also undertaken for this impish starlet. In a series of undated handwritten notes, Walt envisioned a Never Land party wherein “Peter commands fairies to spread banquet and show in [the Darling children’s] honor—fairies serve meal— put on show with fairy entertainment,” including a “Fairy jazz band” that plays as “Tink dances.” Though this imaginative scene—while predating Disney’s Fairies franchise by decades—did not end up in the completed film, the endlessly imaginative producer was obviously intent on making Tink the center of attention whenever possible.

2. Does This Ring a Bell?
Walt determined that Tink would “speak through the sound of bells,” as had traditionally been done on stage. To get every bit of expressiveness and personality out of the silvery notes, the great showman turned to Disney Legend Jimmy Macdonald. The Disney Studio’s maestro of sound effects met one of his greatest challenges as he carefully selected exactly the right bells from his extensive sound-effects library. Still, Walt felt an extra special touch was needed, so he signed on master bell musicians Bernard and Dorothy Mason who, under Macdonald’s supervision, used their own equipment to create a “vocabulary” for Tinker Bell’s dialogue.

Marc Davis

3. Pure Pantomime
Walt assigned Disney Legend Marc Davis as Tink’s supervising animator, and the creativity of this member of Walt’s elite animation team, the Nine Old Men, soared in designing and animating the high-flying pixie. Since Tink only spoke with bell sounds, every thought and emotion of the feisty fairy are expressed through action. “She’s a pure pantomime character,” Davis noted, “which in itself I think was very interesting—that she didn’t talk, but you know what she’s thinking.”

Tinker Bell

4. Miss Bell’s Body Language
For inspiration in creating Tink’s onscreen performance, Davis turned to dancer/actress Margaret Kerry to pantomime the pixie’s actions with oversized props on an otherwise empty soundstage. “There was no one for me to react to… I had to conjure up everything,” Kerry said. The author of a recently published memoir entitled Tinker Bell Talks, Kerry described her pixie counterpart as being like “a 13-year-old who is just learning about what the world is. So everything is new and fresh and childlike to her. The pouting and anger were fun to do!” Davis said of the live-action model’s reference performance: “She was a tremendous help in allowing us to rough out the action.”

5. The Fairy’s Face
If Kerry delivered the body language that inspired Tink’s behavior then Ginni Mack provided a particular inspiration for Tink’s pixieish countenance. Among the most skilled of the painters in Disney’s legendary Ink & Paint Department, Mack was a well-regarded Paint Lab artisan when Marc Davis chose her as inspiration for Tink’s face. Her twinkly eyes and elfin face, as well as her signature blonde hair—most often tied in a bun with bangs swept to the side—were a major influence on Tink’s sprightly style.

6. Little Star, Big Screen Debut
It was long believed that Disney’s production of Peter Pan was the first to portray Tinker Bell as a human figure, but Virginia Brown Faire had portrayed her in the 1924 silent film version. However, she was seen in only a few fleeting close-ups, appearing throughout the remainder of the film as the traditional spot of light. In producing his screen version of the classic play, Walt noted, “On stage, Tinker Bell has always been represented by the flash of a spotlight, but we [through the art of animation] can make her glow like a firefly as she darts through space.” When Variety reviewed the brand-new animated feature on January 14, 1953, the critic opined presciently, “The picture also brings to life, for the first time, the character of Tinker Bell, that gold dust-sprinkling sprite of Never Land who, in her decidedly feminine nature as depicted by Disney artists, is certain to capture audience fancy as much, probably more, than any of the Barrie characters.”

Tinker Bell

7. Tink TV
The very next year, Walt drew on her newly established star power by casting her to open his groundbreaking Disneyland television series. Debuting in 1954, this primetime hour enlisted animation by Disney Legend Les Clark—one of Tink’s Peter Pan animators—to showcase Tink magically introducing the TV series’ four realms. Tink also flew into the episodes themselves occasionally, never more memorably than when Walt asked Tink to whisk viewers to Disneyland Park in the 1958 installment, “An Adventure in the Magic Kingdom.” The moment from this episode when Walt rose off the ground after Tinker Bell mischievously sprinkled him with pixie dust was memorably recreated in Saving Mr. Banks (2013), with Tom Hanks as Walt—and Tink as herself.

8. Tinker Bell in Comic Books
In addition to paying a visit to Pixieland in the deluxe Peter Pan Treasure Chest comic book in 1952 (before Peter Pan was even in theaters) and hosting the giant-sized Disneyland, U.S.A comic book in 1960, Tinker Bell winged her way onto the pages of her very own comic book in 1958. Preeminent Disney comic book artist Al Hubbard illustrated Adventures of Tinker Bell and the New Adventures of Tinker Bell. Some of the lighthearted stories featured within showed Tink interacting with other fantasy folk, such as elves and gnomes.

9. Pages and Pages of Pixies
The popularity of this iridescent imp has only increased over the decades. In 2005 Disney Publishing announced that Tinker Bell would headline a new franchise, Disney Fairies. Fairy Dust and the Quest for the Egg, the first novel in a trilogy written by Newbery Honor-winning author Gail Carson Levine, was published in 45 countries and 32 languages and became a New York Times bestseller.

Tinker Bell

10. Tink Talks
With Tinker Bell (2008), the first of a series of direct-to-DVD featuring the Disney Fairies, Peter Pan’s pixie pal was top-billed at last. There was no question about Tink talking in these CG films, so the perfect voice had to be found for this beloved character. “We knew that this character was curious,” explained Peggy Holmes, director of two of the Tinker Bell movies. “That she’s fun. She’s feisty. She’s super-loyal to Peter. Not to mention able to get angry. So we needed to find an actress that could portray that range of emotions. And Mae Whitman—thankfully—had that range.” For her part, Whitman enthused, “I love playing Tinker Bell. She’s great. So smart and independent and funny. I’m so happy and excited that I get to play someone like her. She’s a great role model.”

Tinker Bell

11. Tinker Bell Superstar
Tinker Bell’s undeniable star power was cemented when Tink’s Hollywood Walk of Fame Star was unveiled on Hollywood Boulevard on September 21, 2010. Following in the footsteps of such Disney characters as Mickey Mouse and Winnie the Pooh, the iconic imp was the recipient of the 2,418th star. A bona fide legend of screen, television and the printed page, Tinker Bell is simply irresistible. As Walt said in 1953 as he introduced his shining little sprite, “I believe you’re going to like Tinker Bell… we fell in love with her.”

Pedro Pascal Revealed as the Deadly Gunfighter of The Mandalorian

By D23 Team

Ever since news broke about The Mandalorian, the first-ever Star Wars live-action series, we’ve been waiting with bated breath to hear more updates about this highly anticipated series. Today, our excitement has jumped to lightspeed with Lucasfilm’s announcement of a star-studded cast joining the Star Wars universe.

Pedro Pascal (Narcos) has been cast in the title role as a lone Mandalorian gunfighter in the outer reaches of the galaxy. He is joined by Gina Carano (Deadpool), Giancarlo Esposito (Breaking Bad), Emily Swallow (Supernatural), Carl Weathers (Predator), Omid Abtahi (American Gods), Werner Herzog (Grizzly Man) and Nick Nolte (Affliction).

“We’re having a great time working with this incredibly talented group and excited for everyone to see what we’re up to,” says Executive Producer Jon Favreau.

Currently in production, The Mandalorian is written and executive produced by Jon Favreau, with Dave Filoni (Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Star Wars Rebels) directing the first episode and serving as executive producer alongside Kathleen Kennedy and Colin Wilson. Additional episodic directors include Deborah Chow (Jessica Jones), Rick Famuyiwa (Dope), Bryce Dallas Howard (Solemates), and Taika Waititi (Thor: Ragnarok).

The series will be exclusive to Disney+, The Walt Disney Company’s upcoming direct-to-consumer streaming service, which is set to launch in the U.S in late 2019.

Stay tuned to StarWars.com for updates.

Amazing First Look at The Tropical Hideaway at Disneyland Park

By Beth Deitchman

Attention, Disneyland explorers! A new destination will open soon in Adventureland, and the Disney Parks Blog has shared some tantalizing photos of The Tropical Hideaway that have us already dreaming of Dole Whip, bao buns, and breezy respites along the Jungle River.

Tropical Hideaway

The exotic marketplace will be open day and night for travelers who are looking for a place to cool off and sit a spell on a warm afternoon; or enjoy the sights and sounds of the tropics in the flickering torch-lit evenings.

Tropical Hideaway

There will be two paths in and out of The Tropical Hideaway, which can be reached across its main bridge, through Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room, or by way of “Skipper’s Walk,” a path that leads from the Jungle Cruise loading dock.

Tropical Hideaway

The Tropical Hideaway is a perfect conversation spot where you can catch up with friends and reflect on your Disneyland adventures—but be sure to pay a visit to a new feathered friend. If you’ve been wondering whatever happened to Rosita, you’ll find her at The Tropical Hideaway, making small talk with visitors while she waits on the dock for her boat to arrive. And Rosita isn’t the only wildlife to be found in the Hideaway. Look closely and you’ll discover small birdhouses belonging to the stars of the Enchanted Tiki Room dotting the roofline.

Stay tuned for more details about this amazing new destination to explore. We’re getting our passports ready and preparing to depart for this new and exotic marketplace as soon as it’s ready to welcome travelers.

Cinderella Added to National Film Registry

By Beth Deitchman

Disney’s animated classic Cinderella has a new fairytale ending that embodies “ever after” in the most literal sense. The beloved feature is one of 25 films that have been added to the National Film Registry, a prestigious list of films that are determined to be “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” and recommended for preservation. Cinderella joins such iconic Walt Disney Animation Studios films as Steamboat Willie, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Pinocchio, and Fantasia, to name just a few, in receiving this honor that has now been given to only 750 film titles.

Since its 1950 release, the film—inspired by the fairy tale by Charles Perrault—has become part of our collective vernacular, allowing underdog sports teams to live out their own “Cinderella story” as they achieve unexpected success, and—on the other side of the coin—often giving stepmothers an unjustified bad rap. But for many of the artists working today at Disney Animation, the film is a touchstone that played an important role in both the Studio’s history and their own.

Cinderella

When Cinderella began production after World War II, it had been some time since the Disney Studio had a successful feature. “[Cinderella] was something the Studio needed. They needed to get back on their feet, get back in the game of feature animation that they basically started,” explains legendary animator Mark Henn, who joined Disney in 1980 and who worked alongside many of Cinderella’s filmmakers, which included Walt’s famed “Nine Old Men.” “The first time I saw Cinderella was in a little theater in the town where my dad grew up. I was just mesmerized—I loved to draw all the time as a kid and this was just amazing to me,” he recalls.

Renowned animator, Disney Legend, and The Walt Disney Company’s longest-serving employee, Burny Mattinson, began his career at Disney in 1953, just three years after Cinderella was released. Mattinson first saw the film in its initial run at Hollywood’s Pantages Theatre and from the beginning, he loved the film’s simple message and story of a poor girl who was downtrodden by her stepmother and sisters. “But goodness overcame all of that. She got her wish, what she wanted to be—more than she wanted to be, really,” Mattinson shares.

“There’s a simplicity to it, but within that simplicity there’s an elegance,” says Henn of Cinderella. The movie was a gamble—made faster than the typical Disney feature of its era—and it was to be made for a price. But at the same time, Cinderella had to maintain the standard that Walt expected for Disney animated films, and from the character designs and the animation style to the film’s memorable music—which includes songs such as “A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes,” “Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo,” and “So This Is Love”—Henn notes, “Everything just came together.”

Cinderella

Ron Clements—half of the legendary team that gave us The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, and Moana (alongside John Musker)—revealed to D23 that Cinderella is the first Disney movie he ever saw, at age 2; he saw it again when it was re-released several years later. Little did he know then that he would one day be mentored by Frank Thomas, who created the film’s menacing, malevolent stepmother. “She’s a really effective villain. No magic, no power—just attitude, really,” says Clements. “Frank was such a great actor and there’s a very sculptural quality to the animation, so you can really see there’s a way he handled the stepmother that’s very strong and pretty scary and frightening.”

Cinderella

The distinct fingerprints of Walt’s “Nine Old Men” can be found throughout the film. In contrast to Thomas’ iconic villainess, who was steeped in reality, Ward Kimball’s mischievous cat Lucifer is a comical cartoon foil for Cinderella’s mouse friends. Ollie Johnston took Cinderella’s stepsisters in a humorous direction, while Marc Davis and Eric Larson both used pencil and paper to envision a title character that audiences—and a prince—would fall in love with. Each artist brought his own nuances to his drawings, though it was Marc Davis who animated what is said to be Walt’s favorite scene in the movie: the moment when Cinderella is given her ball gown by the Fairy Godmother and transforms into the princess she is truly meant to be.

Cinderella

Clements can see Cinderella’s impact on the stories and heroines he has helped to create at Disney. As a young moviegoer, he was heartbroken for Cinderella when her stepsisters tore apart the dress that the mice have finished for her. That scene, he says, “stays with you a lot, and probably had some influence on The Little Mermaid, [in the scene] where Triton destroys Ariel’s grotto. I see a connection there.”

Cinderella

Both Henn and Mattinson have high praise for Cinderella’s storytelling, singling out the third-act plot twist in which Cinderella reveals that she has the second glass slipper. “You don’t see it coming! It was so well done,” Mattinson remembers. “You get a lump in your throat and you’re jumping up and down like the mice,” adds Henn, who believes that Cinderella, his first introduction to Disney animation, is the reason why he is still with the Studio to this day.

A favorite scene for Clements is the sequence where Cinderella scrubs the floors, singing as she goes, and the audience sees her reflection in the bubbles. “In my mind, when I think of what’s special about Disney, what does Disney do that nobody else would do? The way that’s done, there’s something just very unique and magical about that, finding a way to do a song that’s so inventive and sort of beautiful,” he shares. “At that point [Disney Animation] was still relatively new and still being created film by film. But [Cinderella] is an archetypal film in terms of that. It really helps set that feeling of what Disney is and what that archetypal Disney represents.”